Script Worim 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, brand signatures, packaging, social graphics, elegant, warm, personal, classic, polished, handwritten elegance, signature feel, friendly formality, smooth readability, flowing, looped, slanted, monoline, rounded.
A flowing cursive design with a consistent, monoline-like stroke and a steady rightward slant. Letterforms are rounded and open, with frequent entry/exit strokes that create a smooth written rhythm and occasional looped joins. Uppercase characters are larger and more gestural, using long lead-in strokes and soft flourishes, while lowercase forms stay compact with tidy ascenders and descenders. Numerals share the same handwritten cadence, with curved terminals and simple, continuous shapes that match the script’s stroke behavior.
This style suits short-to-medium display copy where a handwritten, refined tone is desired—such as invitations, announcements, greeting cards, boutique branding, packaging accents, and social or editorial headers. It can also work for pull quotes or product names where a smooth cursive wordmark effect is beneficial.
The overall tone feels graceful and personable, balancing a classic handwritten elegance with a friendly, approachable smoothness. Its connected motion and soft curves give it a romantic, note-like character without becoming overly ornate or dramatic.
The design appears intended to emulate neat, practiced penmanship with consistent stroke width and fluid connections, offering a polished script look that remains legible in phrases and headline settings. Its flourished capitals and rounded joins suggest an emphasis on charm and sophistication for presentation-oriented typography.
Spacing appears generous enough to keep counters clear in the sample text, though the connected strokes and long swashes in capitals can create visually prominent word shapes. The repeated, uniform stroke weight keeps the texture even across lines, emphasizing rhythm and continuity over sharp contrast or rigid geometry.